"We hired some of the world’s best crop circle artists to put an image of our latest mobile processor in a barley field," Nvidia blogger Brian Caulfield said.

In case you're not a gamer and don't know what Nvidia is, the company is headquartered in Santa Clara and pioneers visual computing -- the art and science of computer graphics. The crop circle was drawn in the shape of Nvidia's 192-core super chip, called Tegra K1, and the artists said it was challenging to create.

Nvidia CEO Jen Hsun Huang made his confession Sunday night in Las Vegas at International CES, the technology industry's annual gadget show. While news of the crop circles spread as far as Mongolia in central Asia, Huang credited KSBW-TV reporter Michelle Imperato with "cracking the code."

During a news broadcast last week, Imperato stood in front of a green screen with a blown-up image of the circle, and showed where braille reading "192" was hidden within the design.

Chualar resident Jake Gavin caught the high-tech team in the act while they were working in the field on Chualar Canyon Road, but he was not sure what he was watching unfold.

"Every time I drove by I saw them. It looked like they had little GPS's or something," Gavin said.

Caulfield said Nvidia decided not to reveal itself right away, adding, "Puzzle lovers -- many of them our fans -- were having too much fun with this."

The team knew they were not costing the farmer who owns the field any losses because barley is planted between cash crops, and the barley would be plowed under to enrich the soil whether they altered the field or not.

Nvidia sent KSBW-TV a behind-the-scenes video showing how the crop circle was created in two weeks. Watch below or mobile users click here.

A day after Trevor Noah was declared the new host of "The Daily Show," complete with the blessing of the exiting Jon Stewart, graphic tweets targeting women, Jews and victims of the Ebola virus are causing a social media backlash.